
Text -- Jonah 3:8 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Jon 3:8 - -- Their horses and camels, both which they adorned with rich and costly clothing, they must now in testimony of an hearty repentance, clothe with sackcl...
Their horses and camels, both which they adorned with rich and costly clothing, they must now in testimony of an hearty repentance, clothe with sackcloth; the clothing of beasts must witness for men.
JFB -> Jon 3:8
JFB: Jon 3:8 - -- Prayer without reformation is a mockery of God (Psa 66:18; Isa 58:6). Prayer, on the other hand, must precede true reformation, as we cannot turn to G...
Prayer without reformation is a mockery of God (Psa 66:18; Isa 58:6). Prayer, on the other hand, must precede true reformation, as we cannot turn to God from our evil way unless God first turns us (Jer 31:18-19).
Clarke -> Jon 3:8
Clarke: Jon 3:8 - -- Let man and beast be covered - This was done that every object which they beheld might deepen the impression already made, and cause them to mourn a...
Let man and beast be covered - This was done that every object which they beheld might deepen the impression already made, and cause them to mourn after a godly sort. Virgil tells us that the mourning for the death of Julius Caesar was so general, that the cattle neither ate nor drank: -
Non ulli pastos illis egere diebu
Frigida, Daphni, boves ad flumina: nulla neque amne
Libavit quadrupes, nec graminis attigit herbam
Ecl. 5:24
"The swains forgot their sheep, nor near the brin
Of running waters brought their herds to drink
The thirsty cattle of themselves abstain’ d
From water, and their grassy fare disdain’ d.
Dryden
And that they sometimes changed: or reversed the harness and ornaments of cattle, as indicative of mourning, we have a proof in Virgil’ s description of the funeral procession in honor of Pallas, slain by Turnus, Aen. 11 ver. 89
Post bellator equus, positis insignibus, Aetho
It lacrymans, guttisque humectat grandibus ora
"Stripp’ d of his trappings, and his head declined
Aethon, his generous warrior-horse, behind
Moves with a solemn, slow, majestic pace
And the big tears come rolling down his face."
Calvin -> Jon 3:8
Calvin: Jon 3:8 - -- Jonah afterwards adds, And they cried mightily 49 to God This must be confined to men; for it could not have been applied to brute animals. Men t...
Jonah afterwards adds, And they cried mightily 49 to God This must be confined to men; for it could not have been applied to brute animals. Men then, as well as the beasts, abstained from meat and drink, and they cried to God. This crying could not have proceeded except from fear and a religious feeling: hence, as I have said, this cannot be applied indiscriminately to the beasts as well as to men. 50 But it deserves to be noticed, that the king of Nineveh commanded the people to cry mightily to God; for we hence learn that they were really frightened, inasmuch as he speaks not here of ordinary crying, but he adds mightily, as when we say, with all our power, or as we say in French, A force, or, fort et ferme. Jonah then expresses something uncommon and extraordinary, when he tells us that it was contained in the king’s edict, that men should cry mightily to God; for it was the same as though he said, “Let all men now awake and shake off their indifference; for every one of us have hitherto greatly indulged ourselves in our vices: it is now time that fear should possess our minds, and also constrain us to deprecate the wrath of God.” And it is also worthy of being observed, that the king proposes no other remedy, but that the people should have recourse to prayer. It might indeed have been, that Jonah exhorted the Ninevites to resort to this duty of religion, etc. We may, however, undeniably conclude that it is a feeling implanted in us by nature, that when we are pressed by adversities, we implore the favor of God. This then is the only remedy in afflictions and distresses, to pray to God. But when we, taught by the Law and by the Gospel, use not this remedy, whenever God warns us and exhorts us to repentance, what shadow of excuse can we have, since heathens, even those who understood not a syllable of true religion, yet prayed to God, and the king himself commanded this with the consent of his nobles? Hence this edict of the king ought to fill us with more shame than if one adduced the same doctrine only from the word of God: for though the authority of that king is not the same with that of God, yet when that miserable and blind prince acknowledged through the dictates of nature, that God is to be pacified by prayer, what excuse, as I have said, can remain for us?
But Jonah shows more clearly afterwards, that it was no feigned repentance when the Ninevites put on sackcloth, and abstained also from meat and drink; for it follows in the kings edict, And let every one turn from his own wicked ways and from the plunder which is in their hands Here the heathen king shows for what purpose and with what design he had given orders respecting fasting and other things; it was done that the Ninevites might thus more effectually stimulate themselves to fear God; for he here exhorts them to turn from their evil way. By “way” the Scripture usually means the whole course or manner of man’s life; it was as though he said, “Let every one of you change his disposition and his conduct; let us all become new creatures.” And this is true penitence, the conversion of man to God; and this the heathen king meant. The more shameful then is their dullness who seek to pacify God by frivolous devices, as the Papists do; for while they obtrude on God trifles, I know not what, they think that these are so many expiations, and they tenaciously contend for them. They need no other judge than this heathen king, who shows that true penitence is wholly different, that it then only takes place when men become changed in mind and heart, and wholly turn to a better course of life.
Let every one then turn, he says, from his evil way, and from the plunder 51 which is in their hand. One kind of evil is here subjoined, a part being stated for the whole, for plunders were not the only things which stood in need of amendment among the Ninevites, as it is probable that they were polluted by other vices and corruptions. In a city so large, drunkenness probably prevailed, as well as luxury, and pride, and ambition, and also lusts. It cannot indeed be doubted, but that Nineveh was filled with innumerable vices: but the king, by mentioning a part for the whole, points out here the principal vice, when he says, Let every one turn from his evil way, and from his rapacity. It was the same as though he had said that the principal virtue is equity or justice, that is, when men deal with one another without doing any hurt or injury: and well would it be were this doctrine to prevail at this day among all those who falsely assume the Christian name. For the Papists, though they accumulate expiations, pass by charity; and in the whole course of life equity has hardly any place. Let them then learn, from the mouth of a heathen king, what God principally requires from men, and approves of in their life, even to abstain from plunder and from the doing of any injury. We now then perceive why rapacity was especially mentioned. But we must bear in mind that the king, as yet a novice, and hardly in a slight degree imbued with the elements of religion, through hearing what Jonah preached, gave orders to his people according to the measure of his faith and knowledge: but if he made such progress in so short a time, what excuse can we pretend, whose ears have been stunned by continual preaching for twenty or thirty years, if we yet come short of the novitiate of this king? These circumstances ought then to be carefully observed by us. Let us now proceed —
TSK -> Jon 3:8
TSK: Jon 3:8 - -- cry : Jon 1:6, Jon 1:14; Psa 130:1, Psa 130:2
let : Isa 1:16-19, Isa 55:6, Isa 55:7, Isa 58:6; Eze 18:21-24, Eze 18:27, Eze 18:28, Eze 18:30-32, Eze 3...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Jon 3:8
Barnes: Jon 3:8 - -- Let man and beast be covered with sackcloth - The gorgeous caparisons of horses, mules and camels was part of Eastern magnificence. Who knows n...
Let man and beast be covered with sackcloth - The gorgeous caparisons of horses, mules and camels was part of Eastern magnificence. Who knows not how man’ s pride is fed by the sleekness of his stud, their "well-appointed"trappings? Man, in his luxury and pride, would have everything reflect his glory, and minister to pomp. Self-humiliation would have everything reflect its lowliness. Sorrow would have everything answer to its sorrow. People think it strange that the horses at Nineveh were covered with sackcloth, and forget how, at the funerals of the rich, black horses are chosen and are clothed with black velvet.
And cry unto God mightily - , "with might which conquereth judgment."A faint prayer does not express a strong desire, nor obtain what it does not strongly ask for, as having only half a heart.
And let them turn, every man from his evil way - Isa 59:6. "See what removed that inevitable wrath. Did fasting and sackcloth alone? No, but the change of the whole life. How does this appear? From the prophet’ s word itself. For he who spake of the wrath of God and of their fast, himself mentions the reconciliation and its cause. "And God saw their works."What works? that they fasted? that they put on sackcloth? He passes by these, and says, "that every one turned from his evil ways, and God repented of the evil which He had said that He would do unto them."Seest thou, that not the fast plucked them from the peril, but the change of life made God propitious to these pagan. I say this, not that we should dishonor, but that we may honor fasting. For the honor of a fast is not in abstinence from food, but in avoidance of sin. So that tie who limiteth fasting to the abstinence from food only, he it is, who above all dishonoreth it. Fastest thou? Show it me by its works. ‘ What works?’ askest thou? if you see a poor man, have mercy; if an enemy, be reconciled; if a friend doing well, envy him not; if a beautiful woman, pass on. Let not the mouth alone fast; let eyes too, and hearing and feet, and hands, and all the members of our bodies. Let the hands fast, clean from rapine and avarice! let the feet fast, holding back from going to unlawful sights! let the eyes fast, learning never to thrust themselves on beautiful objects, nor to look curiously on others’ beauty, for the food of the eye is gazing. Let the ear too fast, for the fast of the ears is not to hear detractions and calumnies. Let the mouth too fast from foul words and reproaches. For what boots it, to abstain from birds and fish, while we bite and devour our brethren? The detractor preys on his brother’ s flesh."
He says, each from his evil way , because, in the general mass of corruption, each man has his own special heart’ s sin. All were to return, but by forsaking, each, one by one, his own habitual, favorite sin.
And from the violence - " Violence"is singled out as the special sin of Nineveh, out "of all their evil way;"as the angel saith, Mar 16:7. "tell His diciples and Peter."This was the giant, Goliath-sin. When this should be effaced, the rest would give way, as the Philistines fled, when their champion was fallen to the earth dead. "That is in their hands,"literally "in their palms", the hollow of their hand. The hands being the instruments alike of using violence and of grasping its fruits, the violence cleaves to them in both ways, in its guilt and in its gains. So Job and David say, Job 16:17; 1Ch 12:17. "while there was no violence in my hands;"and Isaiah, "the work of wickedness is in their hands."Repentance and restitution clear the hands from the guilt of the violence: restitution, which gives back what was wronged; repentance, which, for love of God, hates and quits the sins, of which it repents. "Keep the winning, keep the sinning. The fruits of sin are temporal gain, eternal loss. We cannot keep the gain and escape the loss. Whoever keeps the gain of sin, loves it in its fruits, and will have them, all of them. The Hebrews had a saying , "Whoso hath stolen a beam, and used it in building a great tower, must pull down the whole tower and restore the beam to its owner,"i. e., restitution must be made at any cost. "He,"they say , "who confesses a sin and does not restore the thing stolen, is like one who holds a reptile in his hands, who, if he were washed with all the water in the world, would never be purified, until he cast it out of his hands; when he has done this, the first sprinkling cleanses him."
Poole -> Jon 3:8
Poole: Jon 3:8 - -- But let man every man, from the greatest, the king on the throne, to the least, the beggar on the dunghill, put off his usual and softer habit, and a...
But let man every man, from the greatest, the king on the throne, to the least, the beggar on the dunghill, put off his usual and softer habit, and afflict himself in coarsest garments.
And beast their horses, in which they gloried much, their camels also, both which they adorned with rich and costly clothing in their stables, and with as rich furniture for saddles, bridles, and trappings when they were used abroad, now all, in testimony of a hearty repentance, must clothe with sackcloth; the clothing of beasts must witness for men.
Cry mightily unto God: beasts in distress and starving cry to God, as the young ravens and hungry lions, and so here beasts of the herd and flock cry. But it is to be referred to men lamenting their sins, deprecating judgments. imploring mercy with all earnestness and vehemency Of desire, called here a crying mightily to God, as Amo 1:5 .
Let them turn the inhabitants of Nineveh, whether traders, or who live at their ease and pleasure there, let them reform and amend their doings. Every one: the edict for ceasing from violence is as full and particular as the edict for fasting, alt are commanded to be just and righteous.
From his evil way not cease from single acts only, but change the course and habitual manner of life, called here their way: every one was vicious, and each one almost had some particular method of sin, which was his way of sinning; this must they turn from. Violence: oppression and rapine, as a chief sin, is here particularly mentioned: compare this with Nah 3:1 .
That is in their hands which acted by them is still in their bands, both in the guilt of it, the effects of it, and as publicly known as what is seen in a man’ s hands: see Psa 7:3 .
Gill -> Jon 3:8
Gill: Jon 3:8 - -- But let man and beast be covered with sackcloth,.... As the king was, and the people also were; and this order enjoined the same to the beasts, horses...
But let man and beast be covered with sackcloth,.... As the king was, and the people also were; and this order enjoined the same to the beasts, horses, and camels, whose rich trappings were to be taken off, and sackcloth put upon them, for the greater solemnity, of the mourning; as at this day, at the funerals of great persons, not only the horses which draw the hearse and mourning, coaches are covered with black velvet, to make the solemnity more awful: but others are led, clothed in like manner:
and cry mightily unto God; which clause stands so closely connected with the former, as if it respected beasts as well as men, who sometimes are said to cry for food in times of drought and distress, Joe 1:20; and who here might purposely be kept from food and drink, that they might cry, and so the more affect the minds of the Ninevites, in their humiliation and abasement; but men are principally meant, at least who were to cry unto God intensely and earnestly, with great ardour, fervency, and importunity; not only aloud, and with a strong voice, but with their whole heart, as Kimchi and Ben Melech interpret it; heartily, sincerely, and devoutly, for the averting divine wrath, and the pardon of their sins, and the sparing of their city:
yea, let them turn everyone from his evil way; as well knowing that fasting and prayer would be of no avail, without leaving everyone their sinful courses, and reforming their life and manners:
and from the violence that is in their hands: their rapine and oppression, their thefts and robberies, and preying upon the substance of others; which seem to be the reigning vices of this city, in doing which many murders were committed also; see Nah 3:1; the Jewish writers interpret this of making restitution for rapine and violence, which is a genuine fruit of repentance; see Luk 19:8. The Septuagint version understands this, not as a direction from the king to the men of Nineveh what they should do, but as a narrative of what they did; and no doubt but they did these things, put on sackcloth, fast, pray, and turn from their evil ways; yet they are the instructions of the king unto them and the orders he gave them.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Jon 3:8 Heb “that is in their hands.” By speaking of the harm they did as “in their hands,” the king recognized the Ninevites’ p...
Geneva Bible -> Jon 3:8
Geneva Bible: Jon 3:8 But let man and beast be covered with sackcloth, and ( f ) cry mightily unto God: yea, let them turn every one from his evil way, and from the violenc...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jon 3:1-10
TSK Synopsis: Jon 3:1-10 - --1 Jonah, sent again, preaches to the Ninevites.5 Upon their repentance,10 God repents.
Maclaren -> Jon 3:1-10
Maclaren: Jon 3:1-10 - --Threefold Repentance
And the word of the Lord came unto Jonah the second time, saying, 2. Arise, go unto Nineveh, that great city, and preach unto it...
MHCC -> Jon 3:5-10
MHCC: Jon 3:5-10 - --There was a wonder of Divine grace in the repentance and reformation of Nineveh. It condemns the men of the gospel generation, Mat 12:41. A very small...
Matthew Henry -> Jon 3:5-10
Matthew Henry: Jon 3:5-10 - -- Here is I. A wonder of divine grace in the repentance and reformation of Nineveh, upon the warning given them of their destruction approaching. Ver...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Jon 3:5-9
Keil-Delitzsch: Jon 3:5-9 - --
The Ninevites believed in God, since they hearkened to the preaching of the prophet sent to them by God, and humbled themselves before God with repe...
Constable -> Jon 3:1--4:11; Jon 3:5-10
Constable: Jon 3:1--4:11 - --II. The obedience of the prophet chs. 3--4
The second half of this book records Jonah's obedience to the Lord fo...
